DAVID LAMELAS


DAVID LAMELAS
A Study of Relationships: Between Inner and Outer Space, 1969, 16 mm film, black-and-white, sound, 24 minutes

In conjunction with the current David Lamelas exhibition at Monika Sprüth Philomene Magers, this film screening presents Lamelas’ early London films. Working on the brink of the ‘swinging ‘60s’ and the beginning of the new information age, Lamelas’ work is based on conflicting oppositions: his films are both engaged and distanced, analytic and frivolous. It is his light touch and his ability to see the political in the banalities of every-day life that make his films so intriguing to this day. The historical climate at the time of Lamelas’ stay in London called for a profound revision of modern artistic practice, which most importantly involved the use of new media, such as photography, film and video. Lamelas’ experiments with photography and film projection led to pioneering works, such as ‘Film Script (Manipulation of Meaning)’ and ‘London Friends’, both on view in the gallery. There is an interesting dialogue between the works on display and Lamelas’ first films, which investigate the politics of exhibition making and the construction of meaning through media, while radically questioning traditional notions of art, beauty and narrative.

The screening will be followed by a conversation between Lamelas’ long-term colleague and friend Lynda Morris, who ‘starred’ in ‘Film Script’ and ‘London Friends’, and Maxa Zoller, curator of this event. Lynda Morris is curator of the Norwich Gallery and EASTinternational at Norwich School of Art and Design. She has also published extensively on art of the 1960s and 70s.

‘A Study of Relationships Between Inner and Outer Space’ (1969) was made for the exhibition ‘Environments Reversal’ at the Camden Arts Centre in 1969. The paradigmatic title of the show finds its echo in the film, which explores its immediate ‘environment’: the ‘white cube’ of the exhibition venue and central London, then spiraling out towards Greater London and into the universe. The news of the Apollo moon landing gives the film its political background and adds to its surreal character, which is typical of Lamelas’ work. The film also anticipates ‘Film Script’, which, too, takes an art gallery as its subject, the Nigel Greenwood Gallery. ‘Film Script’ is a multimedia installation, in which Lamelas combined photographs and film projection to explore the fabrication of meaning through codes.

‘Cumulative Script’ (1971) uses jump-cut editing and repetition to confuse our conventional sense of linear narrative and coherence. The film shows two men walking into a park, where they engage in a rough yet playful wrestle. It is the very banality of the subject matter, which creates a subtle unease when watching the film. Like ‘Film Script’, ‘Cumulative Subject’ was presented together with cardboard-mounted photographs as an installation.

‘To Pour Milk into a Glass’ (1972) is based on the absurd, repetitive action of pouring a glass of milk. Yet, Lamelas presents us with alternative ways of pouring a glass of milk, such as pouring half a glass or spilling the milk, pouring next to the glass or onto pieces of broken glass. The self-explicatory title conceals the complexity of the film. Deconstructing the act of pouring milk, Lamelas subverts our perception of what is ‘meaningful’ and what is ‘meaningless’, what is ‘right’ and what is ‘wrong’.

  • Sprueth Magers
  • Miroslav Tichy



    Miroslav Tichy
    October 6 – November 2, 2007

    Taka Ishii Gallery is pleased to announce the debut exhibition in Japan of artist Miroslav Tichy.
    Born in 1926, in the present-day Czech Republic, Tichy is an embodiment of the myth of the
    artist/genius. “Discovered” by curator Harald Szeemann, who organized a presentation of Tichy’
    s works at the First International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Seville (Seville, Spain,
    2004), Tichy has since been the focus of museum exhibitions including the Kunsthaus Zurich
    (Zurich, Switzerland, 2005) and De Hallen, Frans Hals Museum (Haarlem, the Netherlands, 2006)
    with upcoming exhibitions (all 2008) including the Centre Pompidou (Paris, France), the Museum
    of Modern Art Frankfurt (Frankfurt, Germany) and the Douglas Hyde Gallery (Dublin, Ireland).

    As a student of painting at the Academy of Art, Prague, Tichy early came into conflict with the
    Communist government and was forced to abandon his studies and spend a number of years in both
    prisons and mental hospitals. Neither a criminal nor insane, Tichy’s rebellious nature was
    simply ill-suited to his environment. Perhaps as a result of such oppression, Tichy subsequently
    developed a highly individual approach towards art practice and life-in-general. Never again to
    leave his home city of Kyjov, Tichy turned from painting proper to a form of photography.
    Basing his life on an ethic of skepticism, Tichy followed an outwardly impoverished path, his
    physical appearance and home a shambles, and this extended to the means whereby which he produced
    his photographs. Utilizing bits of junk and scraps as well as old, discarded cameras, Tichy
    incorporated the practice of photography into his daily life, following no particular plan or
    rule other than to take a number of photographs within a given period of time.

    A primary, though not sole, focus of Tichy’s daily observations was the female form.
    Literally thousands of b x w images were created and serve as a record of Tichy’s life-long
    vision. Weathered over time and maintained in decidedly non-archival conditions, the
    photographs physical condition mirror their out-of-focus, hazy content. Oftentimes a trace of
    drawing remains as Tichy would, without hesitation, alter images with pencil and create
    make-shift frames from colored paper. Melancholy and romantic, the photographs re-present an
    extremely sensual inner life of the artist.

    The Taka Ishii gallery exhibition will include a series of 29 vintage prints as well as a
    presentation of one of the artist’s hand-crafted cameras and will be accompanied by the
    publication of a bilingual catalogue produced in cooperation with the Tichy Ocean Foundation.
        

  • Taka Ishii Gallery
  • Husk Mit Navn


    Lots of new photos on my homepage:

  • Husk Mit Navn
  • I’m in these 3 group shows:
    -“Comix” Brandts Klædefabrik (Denmark) 22/9-6/1 08
    -“Match Race” Nordjyllands Kunstmuseum (Denmark)
    5/9-25/11
    -“Made Love” Arken (Denmark) 15/9-9/12

    I will be selling some new paintings at these art
    fairs:
    -“Art Copenhagen” 21/9-23/9 (V1 Gallery og Charlotte
    Fogh Contemporary)
    -“Zoo art fair” in London 12/10-15/10 (V1 Gallery)
    -“Preview art fair” in Berlin 28/9-1/10 (V1 Gallery)
    -“Slick art fair” in Paris 19/10-22/10 (Alice Gallery)

    Wes Lang VS DEITCH


    Racial Stereotypes As Art (Or Not?)
    Booted from edgy gallery.

    Is Jeffrey Deitch, the outrage-courting art dealer who named the “Sensation” exhibit that so upset Rudy Giuliani in 1999, more easily offended these days? Or has an artist named Wes Lang just learned that being shocking is the best way to get noticed? A show called “Mail Order Monsters” opened at Deitch’s gallery September 6, with two pieces by Lang. Both featured century-old African-American stereotypes, and the next day Deitch pulled them. Lang says the dealer told him he found them superficially incendiary and that certain of his black friends had complained to him. “Jeffrey didn’t think it was appropriate for our gallery,” says the show’s curator, Kathy Grayson, adding that Deitch made the decision so late only because he’d been out of town (in Athens, it turns out) until the day of the opening and hadn’t had a chance to see the work up close. Did Grayson agree with Deitch’s opinion of the works? “I don’t really want to make a comment on them,” she says. “I spoke to Wes privately.” Lang complains that Deitch “didn’t give me the courtesy to explain why I felt the necessity to make these.”

  • NY Mag
  • ROBIN RHODE: WALK OFF


    ROBIN RHODE: WALK OFF

    PERRY RUBENSTEIN GALLERY
    ANNOUNCES

    ROBIN RHODE: WALK OFF
    RHODE’S FIRST SOLO MUSEUM EXHIBITION AT THE HAUS DER KUNST, MÜNICH
    SEPTEMBER 16, 2007 – JANUARY 6, 2008

    August 3, 2007 (New York) – Perry Rubenstein Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of the museum exhibition Robin Rhode: Walk Off at the Haus der Kunst in Münich. Opening on September 15th, this exhibition marks Rhode’s first major solo, European show to date.

    Curated by Stephanie Rosenthal, the exhibition will be an extensive view of Rhode’s multimedia works to date. Photography, sculpture, performance, drawing, video, film and slide projections all converge with emphasis on Rhode’s most recent developments. The exhibition will include works from 2004-2007 and will feature site-specific wall drawings along with remnants from a performance piece, scheduled to take place the evening of the September 15th opening.

    The exhibition will be accompanied by a monograph of the same title published by Hatje Cantz. The fully illustrated, 208 page catalog features 550 color illustrations with texts by Stephanie Rosenthal, Andre Lepecki, and an interview with Thomas Boutoux. The publication will be available in early September.

  • Perryru Benstein